How to Flatten

So, depending on how long you’ve been creating resources on either sharing or selling online, you may have heard the term “flatten.” Friends, I’m here to help with this quick and easy tutorial. It’s easier for me to explain with visuals, so please read on if you a.) have no idea what I’m talking about, or b.) think you have an idea and want to see if you’re doing it right. Either way, it’s minutes that could potentially save you hours upon hours.

First things first. Many people use “flattening” and “securing” interchangeably, but really, they don’t mean the same thing. When I talk to teacher authors about securing and flattening, I feel very much like your grandma that’s telling you to keep your elbows off the table. I am certainly not the clipart police, but if you are using clipart, it truly is your responsibility to read the Terms of Use and fork over the cash to make sure you are securing your work and the clipartists’. I know, Adobe Pro is a lot of money. I get it. Do yourself a favor and make it a priority now before you have 20+ products to redo. You won’t regret it. Ask anyone who has Adobe Pro “Do you think it’s worth it?” and they’ll all shout at you, “YES!”

If you want to try out a FREE 30 day trial and see if the monthly option is more your style, click below.

Flattening refers to making all of the different text and images on the page into 1 single image. This ensures that if anyone were to bypass your PDF security, that they really wouldn’t be able to do much with your resource (they won’t be able to copy and paste any of the text images, just the single image you create for the whole page). I have yet to find a way to flatten that doesn’t diminish the quality of clipart/text in some way, which is part of the reason I don’t require my own clipart to be flattened. If you come across a method that results in better quality, please feel free to let me know so I can alter this tutorial!

First, in POWERPOINT, go to File–>Save as–> and change the format to a PDF.

Save it somewhere you’ll remember. I always save to my DESKTOP.

Then, open it up in Adobe Acrobat Pro. If you don’t have Adobe Pro, I’m not sure how you are securing your clipart and your text to prevent people from stealing it. I know it’s a hard price to swallow, but believe me, having to go back and properly secure all of your products IS A PAIN. Even the newest teacher author that’s only made $5 should be making it a priority to purchase it (especially if you’re using clipart with a TOU that requires it).

Go to File–>Save As Other–>Image–>PNG.

Click Settings to change the DPI.

Change the resolution to AT LEAST 300 pixels/inch (you can scroll it down further to make it a higher dpi). But remember, the higher you go, the larger the file size will be, so keep that in mind.

Save. Now open up Adobe Acrobat Pro. Go to File–>Create–>Combine Files into a Single PDF.

You’ll see this window.

Drag all of the images into the window and click Create File.

Now when you click your PDF you shouldn’t be able to select any of the graphics/text, it should just click all as one single image (that’s the flattened layer).

Now you have a PDF that’s FLATTENED. Easy peasy! You are halfway there! Click below for the next step to secure!

I am still trying to troubleshoot for PC users, but in my version of Powerpoint, I can change the image export to a higher resolution when I save each slide as an image. If I can figure out how to help people on PCs, that will be my next tutorial. Thanks for stopping by!

I'm not sure as I've never tried that option? If you lock it there, you'd have to check the security settings when opening in Adobe to see if it was truly locked. Some programs are notorious for saying that a file is protected but that meaning something different as far as lifting images goes. If you use Preview, please have another person check to see if it's secure on their end (you can email it to me at tongassteacher@gmail.com and I'm happy to test a file to see if that method works). -Jen